
Even those awkward “special” keys worked out of the box, such as volume, display and keyboard dimming. To my complete surprise, CentOS 7 booted just fine on the Mac hardware. The old hard disk came from a Samsung Q330 laptop, on which I had CentOS 7 installed. In case my Windows 10 Folly wasn’t going to be successful, I would have something to go back to in a jiffy. I didn’t want to touch my current installation of High Sierra. I started by swapping out an old hard disk from another laptop I had lying around, so see if this experiment would work in principle. and a wired Internet Ethernet Connection (I’ll tell you why later on).a bootable Windows Installation Disk ur USB Sick (can be created with the Windows Media Creation Tool).What we needįor this experiemnt, we need the following ingredients: I thought I’d take some notes on how I did this step by step, and give you my opinions if this was an adventure worth undertaking. I did this in two live streams the other night, and continued the process over the following days – and now I’ve got a (more or less working) Windows 10 installation on my MacBook Pro (early 2011 Edition). However, being the hacker that I am, I thought perhaps I’ll try the “Windows Only” experience. Apple’s recommended way is to do all this from macOS, using their own Bootcamp setup. So I thought, perhaps I’ll put in a new hard drive that I had in another old laptop and install Windows 10 on it. Even if I could keep up with Mojave and beyond, the hardware might just not be fast enough anymore to give me an enjoyable experience. I’m stuck with macOS High Sierra, without an option to upgrade without shadowy patches. I’ve had it since 2011 and it’s still going strong.Īpple however doesn’t want to suport it anymore. It does everything I want for a portable coding, writing and occasional editing device. Pacifist is compatible with macOS and higher, including macOS Pacifist is optimized for Apple Silicon, and also works on 64-bit Intel™ processors.I love my old MacBook Pro. zip files (and other supported types) over the Web without downloading the entire archive first.įor version 4, Pacifist has been rewritten from the ground up in Swift 5 with a focus on multi-threadedness, resulting in a lot of performance and user-experience improvements. view and extract files from archives via your choice of a slick GUI or an automation-friendly command-line interface, and even.view archive contents straight from the Finder via QuickLook,.analyze existing installations on your system, to help you determine who installed a particular file on your system,.


examine and extract individual files and folders,.Open a wide variety of file archives, including: Pacifist is a powerful multi-tool for working with macOS package files, disk images, and file archives.
